I recently asked
what long-term benefit conservatives derived from Medicare Part
D. Ramesh Ponnuru, who believes (with good reason) that the
program helped President Bush win re-election in 2004,
replies: "If my previous posts are right, two answers suggest
themselves: Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito."
Roberts and Alito are indeed among the highlights of the second
Bush term, even measured against the damage that was done to the
Republican Party during that period. Someday reading their
dissenting opinions will make it easier to swallow the bitter,
federally subsidized, rationed, reimported pills supplied by the
Democrats who now control every elected branch of the federal
government.
More seriously, just because the Bush administration's failures
were often in response to real political circumstances doesn't
make those failures inevitable. Imagine if Republicans tried to
popularize a real, relatively free-market alternative on health
care rather than the Obamacare light favored by some senior
Republicans. Imagine that they tried something similar with the
Medicare prescription drug benefit instead of supporting the
version that is now in place. While their success would be no
more inevitable than Bush's failure, if they had succeeded both
the party's fortunes and many conservative causes -- including
the cause of conservative judges like Roberts and Alito -- would
be in much better shape.
"Imagine" the Republican Party leadership in Washington had
principles, courage and a modicum of political acumen. To imagine
such a thing, you will need a new drug.
I'd recommend psilocybin, James.
R. Dittmar| 5.20.09 @ 10:07AM
Ramesh Ponnuru, who believes (with good reason) that the
program helped President Bush win re-election in 2004
I think that this is very, very debatable. Bush won re-election
because people wanted to give him the chance to finish up the war
in Iraq with some kind of clear victory. It didn’t hurt that
Kerry was a foppish French-looking wussy either. Crediting one of
Bush’s many betrayals of the conservative movement for his
re-election in 2004 smells like the work of Bush apologists to me
and I’ll have trouble believing it no matter how you crunch the
numbers.
Robert Stacy McCain| 5.20.09 @ 9:52AM
"Imagine" the Republican Party leadership in Washington had principles, courage and a modicum of political acumen. To imagine such a thing, you will need a new drug.
I'd recommend psilocybin, James.
R. Dittmar| 5.20.09 @ 10:07AM
Ramesh Ponnuru, who believes (with good reason) that the program helped President Bush win re-election in 2004
I think that this is very, very debatable. Bush won re-election because people wanted to give him the chance to finish up the war in Iraq with some kind of clear victory. It didn’t hurt that Kerry was a foppish French-looking wussy either. Crediting one of Bush’s many betrayals of the conservative movement for his re-election in 2004 smells like the work of Bush apologists to me and I’ll have trouble believing it no matter how you crunch the numbers.
jaya| 1.11.10 @ 12:55AM
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